Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the external world. Perceptual tasks where the hand was stationary demonstrated that cutaneous stimuli from contact with objects provide the illusion of hand displacement. Here, we tested the hypothesis that touch provides auxiliary proprioceptive feedback for guiding actions. We used a well-established perceptual phenomenon to dissociate the estimates of reaching direction from touch and musculoskeletal proprioception. Participants slid their fingertip on a ridged plate to move toward a target without any visual feedback on hand location. Tactile motion estimates were biased by ridge orientation, inducing a systematic deviation in hand trajectories...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
According to classical studies in physiology, muscle spindles and other receptors from joints and te...
International audienceHumans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Touch provides an important cue to perceive the physical properties of the external objects. Recent ...
Touch provides an important cue to perceive the physical properties of the external objects. Recent ...
Touch provides an important cue to perceive the physical properties of the external objects. Recent ...
Moscatelli A, Bianchi M, Serio A, et al. The Change in Fingertip Contact Area as a Novel Propriocept...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
SummaryHumans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deform...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
According to classical studies in physiology, muscle spindles and other receptors from joints and te...
International audienceHumans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Recent studies extended the classical view that touch is mainly devoted to the perception of the ext...
Touch provides an important cue to perceive the physical properties of the external objects. Recent ...
Touch provides an important cue to perceive the physical properties of the external objects. Recent ...
Touch provides an important cue to perceive the physical properties of the external objects. Recent ...
Moscatelli A, Bianchi M, Serio A, et al. The Change in Fingertip Contact Area as a Novel Propriocept...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
SummaryHumans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deform...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
Humans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads [1, 2]. Deformable pa...
According to classical studies in physiology, muscle spindles and other receptors from joints and te...
International audienceHumans, many animals, and certain robotic hands have deformable fingertip pads...